53 



164. Model of the Monte Eosa Alps. Size of actual 

 model 3 ft. by 2 ft. Under a glass shade. Scale about 

 3~olro"o > vertical scale very little, if at all, exaggerated. 



1865. Lent by H. Ellis. 



This is a model of the same district as the last on a slightly 

 smaller scale. It shows the valley of the Visp with the Rim- 

 pfischhorn on the east and the Rothhorn on the west. Further 

 south Monte Rosa is seen on the east and the Matterhorn on the 

 west, with the several glaciers they give rise to. 



165. Relief model of the western Alps and Ligurian 

 Apennines. Size of actual model 4 ft. Gin. by 3 ft. 11 

 in. Horizontal scale ^-sinnnr* or about 4 miles to the 

 inch. Vertical scale TYsVoo* or twice the horizontal. 

 Prepared by Major Glaudio Cherubini. 



E. 79. 1886. Published by Roux and Favale, Turin. 



This is coloured according to the elevations. Highlands are of 

 a brown tint, the lowlands are coloured green. The rivers are 

 marked in dark green (lakes in blue), glaciers and snow fields in 

 white. Comprises all the district from Lausanne on the north 

 to Monaco on the south, and from Chambery on the west to 

 Milan on the east. The roads, towns, railways, and political 

 boundaries are also indicated. There is an explanation in 

 Italian indicating the minor ranges included in the map, viz., 

 the western portion of the Rhcetian Alps from Surettahorn to 

 S. Gotthard, with 12 other peaks. The Lepontine Alps from 

 S. Gotthard to Monte Rosa, with 20 other peaks. The Pennine Alps 

 from Monte Rosa to Mont Blanc, with 19 other peaks. The Graian 

 Alps from Mont Blanc to Mont Tabor, with 35 other peaks. 

 The Cottian Alps from Mont Tabor to Enciastraia, with 22 other 

 peaks. The Maritime Alps from Enciastraia to Mont Saccarello, 

 with 19 other peaks. The western Ligurian Apennines from 

 Mont Saccarello to Mont Lavagnola, with 18 other peaks. The 

 eastern Ligurian Apennines from Mont Lavagnola to Mont 

 Ramaceto, with two other peaks. Each peak has a small 

 label attached to it giving its name. The mountains of the Bernese 

 Oberland are also represented and named in the map, but are 

 not referred to in the explanation. 



166. Model of Mont Blanc, showing the glaciers. 

 Scale 1 in. to the mile horizontal. Vertical heights not 

 exaggerated. Size, 24 in. by 20 in. 



E. 142. 1874. Modelled by Jas. B. Jordan. 



The cultivated land is represented in green, the bare rocks in 

 grey, the glaciers and snow fields in white. The names of all 



